They rock and roll all night and doctor every day

TIME TO JAM - Jeffery Haupt is a podiatrist by day and guitarist for the band Velicious by night, one of five bands playing in a battle-of-the-bands event to benefit Woman for World Health charity.

TIME TO JAM - Jeffery Haupt is a podiatrist by day and guitarist for the band Velicious by night, one of five bands playing in a battle-of-the-bands event to benefit Woman for World Health charity. (DON LEACH, Daily Pilot)

NEWPORT BEACH — Jeffrey Haupt is a little like Clark Kent, except instead of swapping a reporter's notebook for Superman's cape, the doctor hangs up his stethoscope for an electric guitar and microphone.

"It's a lot like living a double life," said Haupt, who by day is a board-certified foot and ankle surgeon practicing near Fashion Island.

After work and on weekends, Haupt is the lead singer and backup guitarist for Velicious, an '80s metal and rock party anthems band.

It's a tough act for this doctor who juggles 50- to 60-hour workweeks with being a full-time husband and father of two young children.

"It can be a little tricky," Haupt said, "especially for the older patients. I don't want to scare anyone."

On Sunday, the Man of Metal will face off against other musical moonlighters in a battle of the bands to raise money for cleft lip and oral surgeries in Third World countries.

The benefit, organized by Women for World Health, will feature five "doctors' bands," whose members mostly work in the medical field.

Some of the band names are a clue to the members' alternate identities, such as "Open Wide," a coalition of dentists and oral surgeons, and "Circle of Willis" — the circle of arteries that supply blood to the brain — which is led by a neurosurgeon.

"You would never guess how many medical people are very talented," said Dottie Baker, Women for World Health event organizer. "Not just in taking care of people, which they do every day, but also in music and play at various well-known venues."

The title of champion will be decided in part by a panel of judges and audience vote. Additionally, the event will feature a raffle and silent auction to raise money for the organization's upcoming Africa trip to Sierra Leone in December.

"This is going to be a great event with the medical people sharing their talents with us," Baker said. "The bands and the audience may not be able to go on our trip with us, but they're there, supporting our efforts, and that helps us."

Or enough will be raised to offset not just the volunteers' travel costs, which run $2,000 per person, but also to help see families back home who must travel 100 miles or more to get the life-changing surgeries, she said.

"I've seen the result of these surgeries on families and kids with these terrible, disfiguring congenital conditions," said anesthesiologist Steve Garber, who will play with the Barrelhouse Rockers on Sunday. "To us, it's a great thing to do this. But for them, it impacts the rest of their lives."

When Haupt and the rest of Velicious take the stage at the Galaxy Concert Theatre in Santa Ana this weekend, which seats up to 1,000, it will be one of the larger venues where the band has played.

In the last five years, Velicious has performed at major Orange County and Los Angeles venues, including the House of Blues in Downtown Disney and the Cat Club in West Hollywood.

"There will definitely be some butterflies," Haupt said. "It's hard not to at the larger stages."

Another reason for nerves is that the band will be debuting original music that has taken more than two years of late nights and scavenged time to produce.

One thing definitely not to be nervous about is what to do if anyone at the event gets hurt.

Velicious has garnered a rather strong, and unique, audience over the last five years — fellow medical workers and nurses.